http://standaarden.overheid.nl/owms/terms/licentieonbekendhttp://standaarden.overheid.nl/owms/terms/licentieonbekend
These pie charts show the distribution of biomass quantities (in percentage terms) per municipality in the following categories, roadside clippings, reeds and heaths, stems and leaves. The size of the pie chart shows the cumulative quantity. This dataset is used in the "biomass" map as part of the research into the natural capital in Overijssel.
This Dashboard displays parcel status information by city and town, in a map, table and pie chart.Click on a city or town in the map to view information about that municipality.Click on a row in the table to zoom to that city or town.The pie chart displays the fiscal yer currency of parcel data updates.
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a plate that shows the distribution of population in what is now Canada circa 1851, 1871, 1901, 1921 and 1941. The five maps display the boundaries of the various colonies, provinces and territories for each date. Also shown on these five maps are the locations of principal cities and settlements. These places are shown on all of the maps for reference purposes even though they may not have been in existence in the earlier years. Each map is accompanied by a pie chart providing the percentage distribution of Canadian population by province and territory corresponding to the date the map is based on. It should be noted that the pie chart entitled Percentage Distribution of Total Population, 1851, refers to the whole of what was then British North America. The name Canada in this chart refers to the province of Canada which entered confederation in 1867 as Ontario and Quebec. The other pie charts, however, show only percentage distribution of population in what was Canada at the date indicated. Three additional graphs are included on this plate and show changes in the distribution of the population of Canada from 1867 to 1951, changes in the percentage distribution of the population of Canada by provinces and territories from 1867 to 1951 and elements in the growth of the population of Canada for each ten-year period from 1891 to 1951.
This dataset includes information for projects that appear on the City of Austin’s Capital Improvement Visualization Information and Communication (CIVIC) Map Viewer, www.austintexas.gov/GIS/civic. These projects, also known as Capital Improvements Program (CIP) projects, implement the construction, replacement, or renovation of city assets that are useful to the community. Data is currently available for most CIP projects funded in full or in part by voter-approved bond programs from 2010 and 2012. The dataset below is subject to change at any time, and does not represent a comprehensive list of capital improvement projects. For more information about the City of Austin’s Capital Improvement Program, please visit www.austintexas.gov/department/civic. The City of Austin has produced CIVIC, a web application to search Capital Improvement Projects, for informational purposes only. The data and information available at this web site is provided "As is", and "As Available" and without any warranties of any kind either express or implied. The City makes no warranty regarding the accuracy or completeness of this site and the information provided. By accessing or using CIVIC, you agree to these terms of use. The City of Austin may change the terms of use at any time at its sole discretion and without notice.”
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a plate that shows the distribution of population in what is now Canada circa 1851, 1871, 1901, 1921 and 1941. The five maps display the boundaries of the various colonies, provinces and territories for each date. Also shown on these five maps are the locations of principal cities and settlements. These places are shown on all of the maps for reference purposes even though they may not have been in existence in the earlier years. Each map is accompanied by a pie chart providing the percentage distribution of Canadian population by province and territory corresponding to the date the map is based on. It should be noted that the pie chart entitled Percentage Distribution of Total Population, 1851, refers to the whole of what was then British North America. The name Canada in this chart refers to the province of Canada which entered confederation in 1867 as Ontario and Quebec. The other pie charts, however, show only percentage distribution of population in what was Canada at the date indicated. Three additional graphs are included on this plate and show changes in the distribution of the population of Canada from 1867 to 1951, changes in the percentage distribution of the population of Canada by provinces and territories from 1867 to 1951 and elements in the growth of the population of Canada for each ten-year period from 1891 to 1951.
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows two condensed maps of the locations where one or more art galleries, museums or libraries of 10 000 volumes and over existed circa the 1958 publication date of this atlas. Accompanying these maps is a pie chart showing the percentage distribution of volumes in public libraries by province and a bar graph showing the volumes per capita in libraries by province circa 1951.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows a map of six condensed maps of employment and related patterns for the leading service sectors as compiled from the 1951 Census. There are two maps referring to wholesale trade. One of them shows the distribution of the labour force engaged in wholesale trade. This is shown by a dot pattern using one dot for every 200 people of this labour force, and using proportional symbols for all places employing 2 000 or more. The other wholesale trade map shows percentage of net value of sales from wholesale trade in each census division. There are two similar maps of retail trade. One, showing the distribution of labour force, uses the same mapping procedure as that of wholesale trade. The second map shows retail trade as a percentage of net value of sales for each census division. The fifth map shows the distribution of the construction labour force, using the same mapping concepts as for the wholesale trade map. There is an associated pie chart showing the types of construction this labour force engages in. The sixth map shows the distribution of labour force in the fire, insurance and real estate industries, again using the mapping concepts used for the wholesale trade map. This map is accompanied by a pie chart showing employment in the various industries of this group (such as in banking).
Salmonid Enhancement Program (SEP) fish releases from 2015 to 2019 excluding spawning channel facilities. Releases are represented by pie charts on a regional level.Wild stocks of Pacific salmon have experienced significant declines in abundance over the past century. One of the management tools to compensate for these losses has been the use of hatcheries. Over time, hatcheries have also been used to mitigate for habitat losses, to support fisheries, for conservation, and for education.
The layer is suitable for circle or pie chart maps.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 4th Edition (1974) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows locations of ports in Eastern Canada handling more than 5000 tons. Pie charts are superimposed on the map and show whether the tonnage was loaded, unloaded, from foreign ports or from other Canadian ports. Two smaller maps show Newfoundland (1:5 000 000 scale) and Northern Canada (1:20 000 000 scale). The map is accompanied by a graph showing tonnage by territorial division for 1964.
http://standaarden.overheid.nl/owms/terms/licentieonbekendhttp://standaarden.overheid.nl/owms/terms/licentieonbekend
The business parks in Overijssel are divided into three classes based on the proportion of greenery (lowest 33%, middle 33% and highest 33%) on the site. This pie chart shows the share of less green, average green and above average green sites (as a percentage of the surface area of industrial estates per municipality). The size of the pie chart shows how many hectares of industrial estate there are per municipality. This dataset is used to map industrial estates as part of the research into natural capital in Overijssel.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a plate that shows six condensed maps of the distribution of plants producing the following: leather footwear, womens and childrens factory made clothing, synthetic textiles and silks, mens factory made clothing, cotton textiles, and rubber products. All data for these maps is for 1954 with the exception of the rubber products map which is for 1955. Each map is accompanied by a bar graph and pie chart. The bar graphs show the value of production by major categories of products. The pie charts show the percentage distribution of persons employed in each manufacturing industry by province.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows two condensed maps for the distribution of areas seeded in wheat and barley for harvesting circa 1951. Therefore, in the case of wheat, the areas include those seeded in the fall of 1950 as well as those seeded in the spring of 1951. These two maps are both accompanied by pie charts showing the percentage distribution of seeded areas by province. No areas were devoted to either wheat or barley in Newfoundland.
Lighting maps of Vanuatu. Maps of islands in Vanuatu and pie chart overview of lighting i.e. % access to grid, kerosene, torchgas, own lighting and other.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows three condensed maps of the percentage of population: under 20 years of age, 20-64 years of age, and over 64 years of age illustrated by the census division, circa 1951. Each of these maps is accompanied by a pie chart showing the percentage distribution by province and territory. The two remaining maps show urban and rural sex ratios using the number of males to 100 females by census division as of 1951. The rural sex ratio map is accompanied by a chart showing the ratio of males to 100 females by province and territory. As well, a chart accompanies the urban sex ratio map and shows the ratio of males to 100 females for chief urban centers. A set of age-sex pyramids that show the 1951 percentage distribution of males and females by quinquennial age groups for Canada, each province and the territories are also included.
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows two condensed maps for the distribution of areas seeded in wheat and barley for harvesting circa 1951. Therefore, in the case of wheat, the areas include those seeded in the fall of 1950 as well as those seeded in the spring of 1951. These two maps are both accompanied by pie charts showing the percentage distribution of seeded areas by province. No areas were devoted to either wheat or barley in Newfoundland.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Scholarly figures are data visualizations like bar charts, pie charts, line graphs, maps, scatter plots or similar figures. Text extraction from scholarly figures is useful in many application scenarios, since text in scholarly figures often contains information that is not present in the surrounding text. This dataset is a corpus of 121 scholarly figures from the economics domain evaluating text extraction tools. We randomly extracted these figures from a corpus of 288,000 open access publications from EconBiz. The dataset resembles a wide variety of scholarly figures from bar charts to maps. We manually labeled the figures to create the gold standard.
We adjusted the provided gold standard to have a uniform format for all datasets. Each figure is accompanied by a TSV file (tab-separated values) where each entry corresponds to a text line which has the following structure:
X-coordinate of the center of the bounding box in pixel
Y-coordinate of the center of the bounding box in pixel
Width of the bounding box in pixel
Height of the bounding box in pixel
Rotation angle around its center in degree
Text inside the bounding box
In addition we provide the ground truth in JSON format. A schema file is included in each dataset as well. The dataset is accompanied with a ReadMe file with further information about the figures and their origin.
If you use this dataset in your own work, please cite one of the papers in the references.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contained within the 4th Edition (1974) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows locations of ports in Eastern Canada handling more than 5000 tons. Pie charts are superimposed on the map and show whether the tonnage was loaded, unloaded, from foreign ports or from other Canadian ports. Two smaller maps show Newfoundland (1:5 000 000 scale) and Northern Canada (1:20 000 000 scale). The map is accompanied by a graph showing tonnage by territorial division for 1964.
The "CountiesStatesInfo" feature layer is a component of the "Pollinator Restoration 2022" map which is itself a component of the "USFWS Pollinator Restoration Projects Mapper" which is a dashboard showing management projects that benefit pollinators across the Western U.S. See below for a description of the "USFWS Pollinator Restoration Projects Mapper."The "USFWS Pollinator Restoration Projects Mapper" is under development by the Region 1 (Pacific Northwest) USFWS Science Applications program. Completion is anticipated by Winter 2023. Contact: Alan Yanahan (alan_yanahan@fws.gov).The purpose of the "USFWS Pollinator Restoration Projects Mapper" is to inform future pollinator conservation efforts by providing a way to identify geographic areas where additional pollinator conservation may be needed.The "USFWS Pollinator Restoration Projects Mapper" maps the locations of where on-the-ground projects that are beneficial to pollinators have taken place. Its primary focus is projects on public lands. The majority of records included in this tool come from internal databases for the USFWS, US Forest Service, and the Bureau of Land Management, which were queried for relevant projects. The tool is not intended as a database for reporting projects to. Rather, the tool synthesizes records from existing databases.The geographic scope of the tool includes the western states of Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington.When possible, the tool includes projects from 2014 to the present. This timespan was chosen because it matches the timespan of the USFWS Monarch Conservation Database For consistency, the tool groups pollinator beneficial projects into the following four activity types:Restoration: Actions taken after a disturbance, such as planting native forbs after a wildfireMaintenance: Actions taken outside the growing season that maintain habitat quality through regular disturbance using manual or chemical means. Examples: mowing, spraying weeds, prescribed fireConservation: Acquiring land or creating easements that are managed for biodiversityEnhancement: Actions that increase forb diversity and nectar resources, such as planting native milkweedThe tool includes a map that aggregates project point locations within 49 square mile sized hexagon grid cells. Users can click on individual grid cells to activate a pop-up menu to cycle through the projects that occurred within that grid cell. Information for each project include, but are not limited to, acreage, type of activity (i.e., restoration, maintenance, conservation, enhancement), data source, and lead organization.The tool also includes a dashboard to view bar graphs and pie charts that display project acreages and project number based on location (i.e., state), project activity type (i.e., restoration, maintenance, conservation, enhancement), data source, and management type. Data can be filtered by data source, activity type, and year. Data filtering will update the map, bar graphs, and pie charts.
Contained within the 3rd Edition (1957) of the Atlas of Canada is a map that shows two condensed maps of the locations where one or more art galleries, museums or libraries of 10 000 volumes and over existed circa the 1958 publication date of this atlas. Accompanying these maps is a pie chart showing the percentage distribution of volumes in public libraries by province and a bar graph showing the volumes per capita in libraries by province circa 1951.
http://standaarden.overheid.nl/owms/terms/licentieonbekendhttp://standaarden.overheid.nl/owms/terms/licentieonbekend
These pie charts show the distribution of biomass quantities (in percentage terms) per municipality in the following categories, roadside clippings, reeds and heaths, stems and leaves. The size of the pie chart shows the cumulative quantity. This dataset is used in the "biomass" map as part of the research into the natural capital in Overijssel.